EDITORIAL The Focal Point As Southfield's public schools go, so will Southfield — at least as far as the Jewish community is concerned. That has been the recent history of Jewish migration in the Detroit metropolitan area. In the last 40 years, Jewish mobility has been upward and outward, predicated on new homes and better schools. Southfield, after 30 years, has moved from the destination point for some Jews to the point of origin for others. But Southfield has the potential to shatter the recent pattern. Its public school system, the breaking point of other Jewish neighborhoods, remains vibrant and innovative. It continues to rank among the elite in Oakland County and the state. With the influx of other minorities into Southfield, Michigan Educational Assess- ment Program scores for the Southfield Public Schools have remained stable or im- proved. The schools continue to have an unparallel- ed sensitivity to Jewish concerns, closing for the High Holidays and being in the forefront of curriculum development for minorities. These alone, however, are not enough to keep young Jewish families in Southfield. Jews must recognize Southfield as both the economic center of the Jewish community as well as the residential center. We have a vested interest in the community and must continue to support its vibrancy through in- volvement in its politics, its schools and neighborhood associations. Many of our re- ligious institutions are in Southfield, as are our offices and homes. Detroit area Jews have been a transient group throughout this century. From Hastings Street to Woodward, to Dexter, to Livernois, Seven Mile, Oak Park, Southfield and now beyond, we have been the wandering Jews, seeking the best life for our families. In these 90 years the community has spread from a 10-square-mile area to more than 115 square miles. Some will continue to push outward, but others will choose Southfield for its affor- dable housing, central location, quality schools and city services. But we must con- tinue to work hard to keep it — as our Close- Up feature this week states — the center of it all. Yassir In Wonderland Last week, heavily armed Arab terrorists were prevented by Israeli forces from murdering Israeli men, women and children on a Tel Aviv beach. The Palestine Libera- tion Front, a faction headed by Abul Abbas, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization executive committee, claimed respon- sibility for the attempted attack. Yassir Arafat said the PLO was not respon- sible for the raid and had no connection with it. But he refused to condemn it or to remove Abul Abbas from the PLO executive com- mittee. Such behavior would be laughable if it were not for the fact that the United States government has gone along with this farce. On the very day of the attempted attack, the Bush administration testified before Con- gress that the PLO has kept its promise not to engage in terrorism. John Kelly, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, said that while various acts of violence have been perpetrated against Israel since the PLO pledge in December, 1988, the State Department has concluded that either the acts did not meet the State Department's definition of terrorism or that they were car- ried out by PLO members opposed to Arafat. After listening to Kelly, Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) wagged a finger at him and said, "Alice in Wonderland is a scientific research document compared with your testimony." Arafat can't have it both ways. Either the PLO has given up and renounced terrorism or it hasn't; either he is the chairman of the PLO, with control over the group, or he isn't. And if he does not control the PLO, why is Washington talking to him? Clearly, the Bush administration has talk- ed itself into a corner. Once it took the plunge to talk to the PLO, it is loathe to end the dia- logue. But the message it is conveying is that as long as Yassir Arafat does not take per- sonal responsibility for terrorist acts, those acts can continue —Israeli citizens can be at- tacked and murdered — and the United States will not interrupt its empty dialogue with the PLO. Alice in Wonderland, indeed. Summit Threats Israel and her supporters are hoping this week that several recent threats by world leaders made at international summit meetings are simply rhetoric. Otherwise, the Jewish state is in peril. First came the Arab summit in Baghdad, where Iraq's Saddam Hussein held court. He spoke of "weapons of mass destruction" and of "burning up half of Israel" if Israel at- tacks. Though skeptics noted that Hussein was grandstanding for respect in the Arab world, it should be noted that Hussein invad- ed Iran in a war that cost a million lives and he has used chemical warfare against Iran and his own rebellious Kurds. His sword- rattling cannot be dismissed. Then came the U.S.-USSR summit in Washington, where amidst all of the smiles 6 FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1990 and pleasantries between George Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet leader threatened to cut off Jewish emigration if Israel continues to allow Soviet Jews to settle in east Jerusalem and the West Bank. In both the Baghdad and Washington summits, the threats against Israel were motivated by Arab concern that more Jews are coming to the Jewish state, indicating a deep-seated denial about the purpose and reality of the state of Israel. Equally disturb- ing is Washington's lack of response in both instances. Silence can be misinterpreted, but a clear statement of support from Washing- ton for our ally, Israel, could go a long way toward continuing the flow of emigration from the USSR and perhaps preventing a deadly attack from Iraq. LETTERS Carnival Raises More Than $300 Thank you for the wonder- ful article about our children, Nathan Miller and Naomi Loebel, and their carnival to raise money for Operation Ex- odus, ("Children Plan Car- nival lb Benefit Soviet Jews," May 25). We are very proud of them and pleased to report that they raised more than $300. They could not have been so successful without the help of all our family, friends and neighbors. One thing we would like to clarify: the amount we spent (to help get the carnival started) was $7, not $700! Richard and Judy Loebl Jim and Arleen Miller Huntington Woods Orthodox Families Are Thriving In his article "The Jewish Family in Crisis" (May 18), Rabbi Harold Schulweis states that "in a 70-year period in America, from 1870 to 1940, the population in America increased two-fold; marriages increased three- fold; and divorces increased 20 fold." With these statistics from the 1940s, one could on- ly fathom what they may be like in the 1990s. Although Rabbi Schulweis contends that "for Judaism (the dying of the family) is a particular threat," he should not include the Orthodox Jewish com- munity in these statistics At the mikvah dinner last month, Rabbi Leizer Levine, head of the Council of Or- thodox Rabbis, said that in his 50 years of rabbinic duties in the Detroit community, on- ly 10 gets (Jewish divorces) were issued to observant, Or- thodox couples. This is a far 1"--- cry from Rabbi Schulweis' statistics! Rabbi Schulweis believes that "to salvage the Jewish family calls for restructuring the roles of the family members and struggling against the mass culture that threatens the power and idealism of the Jewish fami- ly." I agree we must fight to withstand the influence of the surrounding culture. However, I strongly disagree with the idea that "restruc- turing the roles of the family members" would achieve that goal. Rather, that requires a return of commitment to Halachah (Jewish law). Rabbi Schulweis believes Judaism "is rooted less in dogma or doctrine, than in a people who sees itself as a world-extended family." On the contrary, it is precisely the Jews' total commitment and adherence to Halachah that has unified their families throughout Jewish history. Only by accepting, studying and implementing into their daily lives the divine teachings of the Torah can the Jewish people hope to achieve the results Rabbi Schulweis envisions. For the Orthodox Jewish community, family crisis (as expressed in the ar- ticle) is the exception, not the rule. The Orthodox family is thriving today as it has been for thousands of years in an unbroken chain. Bracha Stein Oak Park . Story Misled The Community . While we are excited about moving into the next decade with new opportunities created by the state's gran- ting of two certificates of Continued on Page 12